All the Music Apps for Google’s Android You Could Need

The HTC Dream Android phone (elsewhere known as the G1) arrived in Australia recently, and I’ve had mine for about a month now. I have been an enthusiastic user of palmtops, organizers, PDAs and smartphones since the late 80s, and this one is very nice, though the battery could last a little longer, and it sometimes feels more sluggish than it should.
The iPhone broke exciting new ground in the smartphone space, and Android – an operating system developed by Google – follows strongly in that tradition. At this stage, in terms of both hardware and software, the iPhone unquestionably comes out on top. But it is Android’s philosophy of openness that interests me most, and could open up very interesting possibilities in the future.
Eight months ago Joel Falconer reviewed six applications for musicians on the iPhone. How does Android compare as a gadget for musicians?
Media Players
For me, the best use of a device this size for a musician is as a media player. And this area clearly demonstrates the difference between the iPhone and Android philosophies.
The iPhone comes with iTunes preinstalled, and will not allow any other media player to be released for the iPhone. Android comes with a music player called “Music”, but quite a few alternatives are available in the Android Market.
iPhone fans may ask whether any of the alternatives are as good as iTunes. At this stage I think they make a good point. Apple really are at the top of the music game.

Music is Android’s native media player. It plays audio, but not video. You can select your music by artist, album, song or playlist, or just shuffle through your entire collection. As you would expect from Google, the search feature is fast, and quite good.
Once you are viewing a list of music, you can scroll through it by sliding your finger, similar to the iPhone. While listening to a song, you can set it as your phone’s ringtone from a simple menu entry. The player supports album art, but only if it’s inside the MP3s id3 tag.
I understand that in the United States that Music includes access to Amazon’s music store, but there is no sign of that on the Australian phone. If you’ve used it, please let us know how smooth and useful the experience was.
Scrobble Droid. I’m a big fan of the Last.fm social music site, and especially of “scrobbling” my music – having my media players automatically add the music I’m listening to to Last.fm’s database. Scrobble Droid adds that functionality to my Dream, but only when I play music through the preinstalled Music app. Another app, aLastFM Player gives me direct access to streaming music from Last.fm from my Android device, including radio stations for artists, friends and recommended songs, and my playlists.
TuneWiki is an alternative media player that displays the songs lyrics while it is playing. Within a few seconds, song lyrics and album art are automatically downloaded from the TuneWiki’s database in real time, and in most cases, the lyrics sync with the song, making it easy to sing along. Users can add lyrics to the database if the words to your favorite song are missing.
TuneWiki isn’t just a novelty program. Most of the features you need in a media player are present, and it could easily become my music player of choice.
Hang on a minute, I haven’t noticed this before. It looks like TuneWiki may be becoming ad-supported. Under the lyrics of the song I’m listening to was an ad in all caps letting me know I can “GET BABES NOW”. Now it’s advertising ring tones, and now it isn’t. Now it’s asking if I “Want2 flirt”. The ads seem to come and go, but they give me second thoughts about using this app too regularly.
Dog Catcher (Beta) is an excellent pod catcher for Android. I’m a fan of podcasts, and probably spend more time in this program than any other.
I love that I can set it only to download podcasts when the device is plugged in to power (to save battery life) and connected to wireless (to save money on data costs). The program keeps track of where I am up to with each podcast, so that if I stop listening to one podcast to listen to another, it continues on from where I was up to when I return.
Other useful media apps are the preinstalled YouTube app, vTap, which searches several video providers on the Web, LukLuk, which can play audio and video files either from your microSD card or their own online network, and Video Player, which does basically what it says.
Useful for both Android and iPhone is the Shazam music discovery engine, which can identify a song when it hears it, and tell you where you can hear or purchase the song online. MixZing is a different type of music discovery solution. It’s a full-featured MP3 player, and recommends songs from its database as you are listening to your music. It sounds similar to the service provided by Last.fm, though I assume Last.fm’s recommendations are more accurate due to its larger user base.
Audio Recording

I can’t imagine recording anything serious on my HTC Dream, but it is a useful device for listening back to a practice session, or capturing lyrics and arrangement ideas when I don’t have time to jot them down. Here are some useful recording apps for Android.
DroidRecord is about as simple as it gets. Run the app, and you have a list of previous recordings, and two big buttons: a red one labeled “Record”, and a green one labeled “Play”.
Livo Recorder describes itself as “a recorder or a Tivo-style ‘monitor’ to keep an audio history that is ready to capture or extend any time.” Unfortunately the demo had expired long before I started writing this article, and I only seem to be able to access the free apps in the Google Market at this time.
Rehearsal Assistant allows you to record your rehearsal, and then record your spoken thoughts and observations about it later. You can stop and start recording many times through the session. Once finished, you can email the session to others.
Note Everything is a handy notebook program. You can create three types of notes: text, paint and voice. Voice notes come with record, play and stop buttons.
Music Tools

Musical Lite contains a metronome, pitch pipe, scrolling three-octave piano, and two-octave full-screen keyboard. The quality of the app seems very high, although playback on the keyboards feels a little laggy (probably the fault of the device, not the app), and you can play only one note at a time. The full version of the app adds a tuner, 128 instrument sounds, and more. Unfortunately I am unable to test it at this time.
Guitar Chordz is a handy guitar chord program, and contains diagrams for major, minor, seventh, and major seventh chords. The “More shapes” button is useful, and shows alternate ways of playing the chord as you move up the neck.
The chord charts are color-coded, with the colors representing which finger to use. When you tap the chord diagram, the chord is played for you. The program also contains a simple guitar tuner, playing the tone for each note in standard guitar tuning.
RockOut is the most fun Android app to play music with. The application contains two guitars (one mellow and one distorted). You strum the strings with your finger, and hear a realistic guitar sound played. The screen is divided into three sections, one for each available chord. The app feels very responsive, and each chord is sampled twice so that you can play upstrokes and downstrokes. The pro app promises a lot more features, but I’m unable to try it at this time.
Hit It! Lite lets you play the drums on your Android device either by tapping the little pads for each drum (including kick, snares, toms and cymbals), or by shaking the device. The app is fun, but the timing is not particularly accurate, perhaps because the Dream needs a beefier processor.
HS Tempo and Tube Tempo BPM both measure tempo in beats per minute as you tap the Android device’s screen.
And that brings us to the review of the music apps available for Google Android devices. In summary, the third party application market for Android is still quite young and immature, and there is no doubt that these apps will improve, and more are on their way. But at this stage, the iPhone’s couterparts offer better value . . . assuming you own an iPhone!
























Thanks for the reviews! I’m the lead developer for RockOut, and wanted to play a little bit of the apologist here for my fellow developers of music apps.
While in many ways Android gives developers the ability to do things that are impossible on the iPhone, like running background processes, realtime audio generation and processing are actually extremely limited at the moment.
There are almost no exposed APIs for real-time audio on Android. That’s the main reason why, as you noted, a lot of apps have significant lag. This isn’t due to a lack of CPU power on the G1 (which is actually about equal to the iPhone in that respect) but actually due to incomplete/undocumented/buggy audio programming interfaces. There’s no way to process the wave data coming out of compressed files, no way to process live data coming into the microphone, and SoundPool, the realtime audio API RockOut and many of the other apps use, is very fragile and can crash the phone if you call some of its methods the wrong way.
A lot of these problems are slated to be fixed with new APIs and bugfixes in the upcoming Cupcake release of the Android OS and SDK (rumored to be out sometime in April), which should let us Android audio developers get a little closer to being able to do some of the things you can do on the iPhone.
Finally, a bit of news/self-promotion: since this article was written, the acoustic Pro version of RockOut is now available, and is the most popular and highest rated paid music app on the Android Market, so check it out!
Thanks again for doing this roundup, and cross your fingers for some great possibilities once Cupcake’s audio fixes hit.
Hi Yoni. Thanks for your detailed comment. You’ll be happy to know that I’ve been playing with RockOut during the week. As an Australian, I only seem to have access to the free apps in the Android Market, so can’t try out the new version.
Thanks for your explanation about Android’s audio limitations. I hadn’t realized. I hope for a smoother experience as they get the bugs out.
I agree with Yoni. For a while I wondered why the Music and Video apps on Android were not as polished as others until I attended a developers conference and developers vented about some of the frustrations on Android. Their discussions about the Music and Video API was disheartening and some would touch an audio app until the API and documentation matures more. Not to mention theirs no native support for “Multi-Touch”, as you have to hack the OS… as multitouch supossedly violates Apples patent. I encourage developers to stick with it and are advocates as I run the leading Android App Review website, where the Music/Video apps have fewer numbers, but hopefully with SDK maturity, apps with evolve too!
Hi Adrian,
just to say that I liked your article and to let you know there is another cool music player that I’ve founded for Android. It’s RockOn (http://abrantix.org/rockon-screenshots.php).
Best regards,
Miguel
The android needs a tracking app like milkytracker (milkytracker.net) The g1 is the perfect platform for making awesome music with a tracker.
@David West
Yes a tracker program would be great and I have been searching but no luick. The g1 woudl be a great platform to write music on as you can jot music any where. There is a lot of source code out there for trackers but I would say that it would be a bit of a task to port it to the andriod platform
Cheers
Alistair
This is why I prob. will return my android phone and then maybe get the new iphone, contract or not. It’s not just music and video (though those are annoying enough, and I didn’t find any apps equal to the iphone ipod.app) but for example try copying 1000 pictures on your sd card, and then time how long those thumbnails take to generate. unbelievably slow.
Hey good stuff…keep up the good work! I read a lot of blogs on a daily basis and for the most part, people lack substance but, I just wanted to make a quick comment to say I’m glad I found your blog. Thanks,)
A definite great read…:)
-Bill-Bartmann